Colombia Coal
An open coal pit at El Cerrejón coal field
Courtesy Embassy of Colombia, Washington
In the late 1980s, much of Colombia's mining future
rested with
coal deposits. Estimates of reserves ranged from 16 to 40
billion
tons in 1987, considered indisputably the largest in Latin
America.
Coal reserves existed throughout much of the country, from
the
Andean highlands to the Caribbean coast (see
table 11,
Appendix).
Only 20 percent of the known coal reserves, however, had
been
surveyed by 1987.
Among the many areas where coal was found were the
Caribbean
lowlands department of La Guajira and the Andean highlands
departments of Cundinamarca, Santander, and Antioquia.
Although all
these areas produced coal in 1987, most Colombian coal was
extracted from the El Cerrejón field in La Guajira
Department.
El Cerrejón was discovered in 1882, explored in 1950,
and
brought on line for production in 1985. The project was
divided
into the northern, central, and southern zones; the
northern zone
was given priority for production because of its estimated
3
billion tons of high-grade recoverable reserves. El
Cerrejón was
organized as a joint venture between the Colombian
government and
a subsidiary of Exxon known as International Resources.
To promote the exploitation of Colombia's vast coal
reserves,
Carbocol was created in 1976. Formed as a commercial
company of the
state, Carbocol was placed under the Ministry of Mines and
Energy
and initially capitalized with US$10.6 million. Carbocol
sold
shares to other government agencies; majority ownership
rested with
the Export Promotion Fund (Fondo de Promoción de
Exportaciones--
Proexpo) and the Colombian Petroleum Enterprise (Empresa
Colombiana
de Petróleos--Ecopetrol). Investment in Carbocol grew
rapidly in
its first decade of operation, reaching US$347 million by
1985.
Carbocol managed all facets of the coal business from
exploration and mining to marketing and sales, both
locally and
abroad. Carbocol's primary goal--to make Colombian coal a
permanent
competitive commodity in the international market--proved
difficult
because of low international prices for coal in the 1980s.
Nonetheless, Carbocol continued to assist the coal
industry by
attempting to reduce production costs, developing
strategies to
expand exports, and creating opportunities for both
domestic and
foreign capital investment in the industry.
In the late 1980s, Colombia's coal was consumed both at
home
(40 percent of mined coal) and abroad (60 percent). The
generation
of electricity accounted for about a third of domestic
coal use,
but this use was not expected to grow, given the
completion of
hydroelectric projects. Industrial use, which accounted
for twothirds of the domestic consumption of coal, was the most
likely
area for internal growth. Low international prices
threatened
further development of the industry because it could not
attract
long-term investment funds. Nevertheless, industry
analysts
expected this situation to change in the 1990s because of
an
anticipated increase in international demand for coal,
allowing a
competitive return on investment for Colombian coal
projects.
In the short term, however, financial problems required
that
the coal industry solicit support from government agencies
operating the oil industry. Ecopetrol's convertible assets
permitted government planners to sell shares of El
Cerrejón to
Ecopetrol in order to inject money into the cash-poor
project. This
allowed the government to retain half-ownership of the
industry
rather than lose control of the coal program by selling
equity
shares to private investors.
Data as of December 1988
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